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Psychologically and by
The PHWP includes APA ’ s Psychologically Healthy Workplace Awards, a variety of APA Practice Organization resources, including PHWP Web content, e-newsletter, podcast and blog, and support of local programs currently implemented by 52 state, provincial and territorial psychological associations as a mechanism for driving grassroots change in local business communities.
( 1 ) Psychologically: the capitalists would not repent and turn towards communist on their own ; ( 2 ) the rulers must be overthrown by the people ; ( 3 ) " the proletarians are discontented, and a demand for communism has arisen and had already become a fact.
Psychologically Goldfinger is warped, possibly because of an inferiority complex brought on by his shortness, in contrast to a number of Fleming's other over-sized villains and physically he is odd, with a lack of proportion to his body.
* Braid, J., " Electro-Biological Phenomena Physiologically and Psychologically Considered, by James Braid, M. R. C. S.
Psychologically this is seen by some to convey a fond celebration of the deceased rather than the traditional solemnity.
Psychologically, the visual stimulus being looked upon by the child is being imitated faster than the imitation of the command.

Psychologically and .
Psychologically the reception should be the climax, following the sermon.
Psychologically, the DMT experience can be overly-intense, potentially causing overwhelming fear and difficulty integrating experiences if one is not mentally prepared.
Psychologically, it involves a person empathizing with others.
Psychologically, a person's urge can be repressed or sublimated.
The Psychologically Healthy Workplace Program ( PHWP ) is a collaborative effort between the American Psychological Association and the APA Practice Organization designed to help employers optimize employee well-being and organizational performance.
Psychologically, bedroom closets are the center of many childhood fears.
Psychologically, foreplay lowers inhibitions and increases emotional intimacy between partners.
Psychologically, a person with macropsia may feel separation and dissociation from the outside world and even from immediate family.
Psychologically, though, the filming was difficult.
Psychologically, she observed the " herd instinct ", or the tendency to work and socialize in groups, as well as the powers of reason and imagination.
Psychologically, intervals cause audiences to return to reality, and are a period during which they can engage critical faculties that they have suspended during the performance itself.
Psychologically these events marked the end of the British Empire, and with it the central thread of popular imperial unity which had bolstered the Scottish Unionist Party until then.
Psychologically, it is possible to become habituated to a degree of stimulation, and then find it uncomfortable to have significantly more or less.
Psychologically, the presence of the US Navy ’ s amphibious assault force prompted rumours, nation-wide, that the US Marines already had established a beachhead in Honduras, and were en route to invading Guatemala.
Psychologically damaged from their near-death battle, the two warriors are intense, but refuse to speak.
Psychologically, however, homeless women in their fifties suffer from troubles and chronic diseases from which their housed counterparts only begin to suffer in their seventies.

too and aesthetic
If this attitude is seriously questioned in the Soviet Union, it does not necessarily follow that the majority of the society in which I live is too aware of the necessity for clarity on this ethical as well as aesthetic point of view.
In addition to having the scientific and engineering acumen to perfect strobe lighting commercially, Edgerton is equally recognized for his visual aesthetic: many of the striking images he created in illuminating phenomena that occurred too fast for the naked eye adorn art museums worldwide.
These " Bloomsbury assumptions " are also reflected in members ' criticisms of materialistic realism in painting and fiction, influenced above all by Clive Bell's " concept of ' Significant Form ', which separated and elevated the concept of form above content in works of art ": it has been suggested that, with their " focus on form ... Bell's ideas have come to stand in for, perhaps too much so, the aesthetic principles of the Bloomsbury Group ".
Its construction led preacher Geert Groote to protest against the vanity of such an immense project, suggesting it was too tall, too expensive and all but aesthetic.
Heine looked down on these writers on aesthetic grounds – they were bad poets in his opinion – but his verse of the 1840s became more political too.
There are also other concerns regarding chlorine, including its volatile nature which causes it to disappear too quickly from the water system, and aesthetic concerns such as taste and odour.
As the term environment embraces the total physical, biological, cultural and aesthetic components of an area, it is generally regarded as too broad and encompassing a term for landscape.
Technically, this surgical principle permits laying the scars in the topographic transition zone ( s ) between and among adjacent aesthetic subunits, which avoids juxtaposing two different types of skin in the same aesthetic subunit, where the differences of color and texture might prove too noticeable, even when reconstructing a nose with skin flaps.
While on one hand this may simply reflect the aesthetic of the music-culture from which the form originated, this, too, was a feature suited to practical restrictions.
Concentrating on this and in the presence of Beatrice Hastings was too much for Jean, the wife of his first marriage, the same wife who had shared in his own theosophic and aesthetic interests of his early activities in the Leeds Arts Club, who did not grant him a divorce but went to live instead with Holbrook Jackson and worked the rest of her life as a skilled craftswoman in the tradition of William Morris.
Establish action threshold ( economic, health or aesthetic )-How many are too many?
On the other hand there are those who succeed too well, who swallow ' Beauty is truth, truth beauty ...,' as the quintessence of an aesthetic philosophy, not as the expression of a certain blend of feelings, and proceed into a complete stalemate of muddle-mindedness as a result of their linguistic naivety.
Wallace argued against sexual selection, saying that the male-against-male fighting aspects were simply forms of natural selection, and that the notion of " female choice " was attributing the ability to judge standards of beauty to animals far too cognitively undeveloped to be capable of aesthetic feeling ( such as beetles ).
Despite the accompanying economic growth and rise in living standards, Bo's tenure in Dalian has sometimes been criticized as having been too focused on aesthetic development projects such as expansive boulevards, monuments, and large public parks.
Another alternative bridge crossing was proposed at Deganwy, but this too was ruled out for aesthetic reasons.
From his later perspective, the term " Epic Theatre " had become too formal a concept to be of use anymore ; one of Brecht's most-important aesthetic innovations prioritized function over the sterile opposition between form and content.
Keorapetse Kgositsile criticized that the term was based too much on blackness by a white aesthetic, and was unable to define a new kind of black perception that would free black people and black art from white conceptualizations altogether.
Its critics saw this type of Medieval art as unrefined and too remote from the aesthetic proportions and shapes of Classical art.
Notable, too, is that the British, in fact Europeans generally, had long nurtured a taste for the aesthetic exuberance of such “ Asian exoticism ” design, as displayed in innovative Indo-Saracenic style and also in their taste for Chinoiserie and Japanned.
Some people believe that the results stray too far from realism, or find them unattractive, but these are aesthetic judgements, and often concern the choices made by the photographer during the tone mapping process, rather than being a necessary consequence of using tone mapping.
This purely formal " division of labour " has been criticized by Nikolas Kompridis, who sees in it too strong a division between practical and aesthetic reasoning, an unjustifiably hard distinction between the " right " and the " good ", and an unsupportable priority of validity to meaning.
Critic Kyle Smith has argued that White " simply has a different aesthetic from that of the herd ", while critic David Chen suggested that he "( perhaps too ) vehemently believes in the integrity of his art and longs for the golden era when the mainstream still cared what film critics thought ".

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